| Literature DB >> 31488083 |
Inga Lorenz1, Daniela Bodschwinna1,2, Nina Hallensleben3, Hartmut Döhner2,4, Dietger Niederwieser5, Tanja Zimmermann6, Anja Mehnert3, Harald Gündel1,2, Jochen Ernst3, Klaus Hoenig7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suffering from cancer confronts both the patient and their partner with a number of psychosocial challenges in various aspects of their life. These challenges may differentially impact on quality of life, coping ability and compliance to treatment. This especially holds true for haemato-oncological diseases. To date, psychological interventions have predominantly been developed for oncological patients however specific interventions for partners of haemato-oncological patients are rare. In this study we aim to conduct a psycho-oncological group-intervention for partners of patients with haemato-oncological diseases. The aim of the intervention is to significantly reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety in the partners and the patient, as well as enhancing dyadic coping.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Cancer; Depression; Dyadic coping; Group-intervention; Partner; Psycho-oncology; Quality of life; Spouse
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31488083 PMCID: PMC6729088 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-019-6094-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Overview of the standardized structure of the sessions
| Treatment components | Content |
|---|---|
| Short opening discussion about today’s feeling | How do I feel at the moment? Questions about last session, if necessary |
| Monitoring home practice | Group conversation about the assigned exercises |
| Basic information | Psycho-education about today’s topic (for example communication within relationships) |
| Discussion of session topic | Talk between the participants led by the therapist: What do I experience as helpful? How do I cope with severe problems? Motivation: Partners shall learn from the model of others, how to cope more functionally and to be helpful for others |
| Practical exercise (incl. Home assignment) | Exercises for in-depth practice of the session topic, e.g., communication role play, integration of positive activities into daily routine |
| Outline for the next session | Short outlook on the topic of the next session |
| Relaxation/imagination/mindfulness | Introduction to established supportive interventions such as progressive muscle relaxation. Aims: Improvement of relaxation skills, resource activation and mindfulness practice to better cope with negative experiences, thoughts and feelings |
| Evaluation | Participant evaluates each session at the end |
Structure and content of the INPART sessions and home practice
| Session | Content | Form of relaxation techniques |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | ● Introduction to the course and goals of INPART | Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) |
| ● Information about the specific burdens of partners of patients with cancer | ||
| ● Identification and activation of resources | ||
| 2 | ● Identification of negative appraisals, interpretations and meanings ● Recognizing and down-scaling of excessive self-expectations to facilitate daily life | Guided imagery: encouragement of a benevolent companion |
| 3 | ● Communication within relationship: Introduction to basic rules of successful communication, non-verbal communication, gender differences in communication | Autogenic training |
| 4 | ● Dealing with emotions, (focus on anxiety) | Mindfulness-based stress reduction |
| ● Promotion of functional anxiety management | ||
| 5 | ● Coping in daily life | Guided Imagery: safe place |
| ● Outlook: taking next steps | ||
| ● Reflection of the program |
Fig. 1Study procedure
Fig. 2INPART flow diagram
Measurements and corresponding time points for patient and partner
| Instrument | Target | Screening | Baseline (t0) | 3-month follow-up (t1) | 6-month follow -up(t2) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Partner | Patient | Partner | Patient | Partner | Patient | Partner | Patient | ||
| Demographics | x | x | |||||||
| Clinical characteristics | x | x | x | x | |||||
| PHQ-9 | depression | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| GAD-7 | anxiety | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| BFI | Fatigue | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| SF-12 | Quality of Life | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| IPC | self-efficacy | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| ECR-RD | Quality of Relationship | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| DCI | DC | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
Note. PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire, GAD-7 = Generalization Anxiety Disorder Scale, BFI = Brief-Fatigue-Inventory, SF-12 = Health Survey 12, IPC = Internal, Powerful Others, and Chance Scale, ECR-RD = Experience in close Relationships-Revised, DCI = Dyadic Coping Inventory
Descriptive and inferential statistics
| Descriptive statistics | ˗ Exploratory data analysis (value distribution, analyses of variance) |
| ˗ Cross table evaluation incl. Control variables (sociodemographic, disease specific) | |
| ˗ Correlation analysis | |
| Inferential statistics | ˗ Comparisons of means (t-test or Mann-Whitney-U-test) |
| ˗ Multivariate analyses of variance (for multiple dependent variables), general linear model | |
| ˗ (Multiple) logistic Regression for identification of predictors and determination of effectiveness | |
| ˗ Actor-partner-interdependence model in order to investigate reciprocal influence within the dyad |